Auto Tuned Tuvan Throat Singing

Aug 03, 2014  Tuvan throat singing by Sheldon Cooper. Is it really Jim Parsons singing? I don't think so. He's definitely forming the wrong 1st formant with his lips. Tuvan Throat Singing is a vocal style that features harmonically rich sounds created by oscillating parts of the throat not used in western singing styles. This video is an introduction to the three fundamental styles of Tuvan throat singing: Kargyraa, Khoomei, and Sygyt. Examples and demonstration of techniques are provided.

Genghis Blues
Directed byRoko Belic
Produced byRoko Belic
Adrian Belic
StarringPaul Pena
Music byPaul Pena
Kongar-ol Ondar
Edited byRoko Belic
Adrian Belic
Wadi Rum Films
Distributed byRoxie Releasing
  • January 1999 (Sundance Film Festival)
  • July 9, 1999 (U.S. limited)
  • November 30, 2000 (Australia)
  • May 25, 2000 (Germany)
88 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Russian
Tuvan

Genghis Blues (1999) is a documentary film directed by Roko Belic. It centers on the journey of blind American singer Paul Pena to the isolated Russian Republic of Tuva to pursue his interest in Tuvan throat singing.

It won the 1999 Sundance Film Festival Audience Award for a Documentary. It was also nominated for an Academy Award in 2000 in the Best Documentary Feature category.[1]

Synopsis[edit]

The documentary captures the story of blind blues musician Paul Pena. After a brush with fame and success in the 1970s, Pena's fortunes faded as he dealt with career and health problems.

While listening to shortwave radio, Pena heard a broadcast of throatsinging, the Tuvan art of manipulating overtones while singing to make higher frequencies more distinguishable, essentially making it possible to sing two notes at once. Pena, over the course of several years, taught himself to throatsing to a very impressive degree. He eventually attended a concert of throatsinging and after the concert impressed one of the throatsingers, Kongar-ol Ondar, who invited him to visit Tuva, a republic of the Russian Federation and a formerly independent country from 1921 and 1944 under the name of People's Republic of Tannu Tuva and the home of throatsinging, to sing in the triennial throatsinging festival held there.

The entire journey, as well as the extraordinary mix of cultures and music, is captured in the documentary.

Production[edit]

The Belic brothers shot the film with two Hi8 camcorders and edited it themselves. They were allowed to edit the film during nighttime at a professional editing facility. It took them three and a half years to finish the film after they shot it. All this time they lived on $500 a month in an apartment above an auto repair shop.[2]Christopher Nolan, a longtime friend of the brothers, is credited for his 'editorial assistance'.

Auto Tuned Tuvan Throat Singing Youtube

References[edit]

Tuvan Throat Singing History

Auto Tuned Tuvan Throat Singing
  1. ^'NY Times: Genghis Blues'. NY Times. Retrieved November 22, 2008.
  2. ^'Finding Their Tuva'.

External links[edit]

Tuvan Throat Singer

  • Genghis Blues on IMDb

Auto Tuned Tuvan Throat Singing Classes

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